2 IntroductionConstant rehearsal and repetition are crucial for keeping information in an individual’s working memory (Bruning, Schraw, Norby & Ronning, 2004).For the purposes of this project I will examine learning activities used in a unit on Edgar Allen Poe to address which aspects of human cognition the activity uses and/or activates.Today I learned that eight months after they originally memorized the first stanza of The Raven, my students were able to retrieve that knowledge and recite it from memory, as well as recalling many biographical facts that they learned about Poe in October and November, 2005.All of the audio you heard on the webpage introduction to this presentation was created by my students on Tuesday, June 13, 2006.

3 ObjectivesThe intent of this project is to examine each learning activity in the unit of instruction.Identify what aspect(s) of the cognitive process and/or memory function(s) the activity addresses.Reflection on what I have learned from this unit analysis about my students as learners and about myself as a teacher and learner

4 The Unit of Instruction Includes:Anticipation/Reaction GuideContinuous multi-directional discourseRote Memorization of the first stanza of The RavenInternet Scavenger Hunt on Poe factsAnalysis of The RavenDevelop criteria for evaluationEvaluate The Raven – build CAPT response to literature skillsWatch The Simpson’s version of The Raven – compare and contrast to our analysis and evaluation

6 In Defense of Rote Memorization of The Raven by Edgar Allen PoeKids need both the poetry and the memorization. As educators have known for centuries, these exercises deliver unique cognitive benefits, benefits that are of special importance for kids who come from homes where books are scarce and the level of literacy low. In addition, such exercises etch the ideals of their civilization on children’s minds and heartsWithout knowing it, a child who has learned a scrap of verse has been drawn into the civilizing interplay of music and language, rhythm and sound, melody and wordsThis represents my philosophy on the value of rote memorization, specifically for students “who come from homes where books are scarce and the level of literacy low.”

7 Internet Scavenger Hunt: Zone of Proximal Development- Vygotsky Guided Learning/Analysis/EvaluationThe Zone of Proximal Development: Vygotsky's idea that development starts socially, with people learning from others, then the individual internalizing what was learnedScaffolding- People do not learn well when they are either continually told what to do, or left on their own to struggle with a problemInternet Scavenger Hunt is guided through a formal set of questions, and a teacher designed website with links to relevant sites on Edgar Allen Poe. Students can also explore other sites, but must determine if the information on the site is reputable.Analysis and Evaluation of the Raven is facilitated by guided questioning and student collaboration in development of criteria used for evaluation of poetry

9 Analysis and Evaluation: Critical Thinking SkillsIdentify expected behaviors and subtasks associated with critical thinking and develop operational definitions.Complete task analyses, define intermediate goals, and develop evaluation methods.Identify "best" methods of instruction for each aspect of the critical thinking process.Students wrote a one page biographical essay on Edgar Allen Poe that addressed the question: Why do you think Poe wrote about such dark, depressing, and scary themes?

11 ConclusionsActivating prior knowledge aids in making meaning and connectionsRote memorization has a place in today’s classroomsGuided learning and Vygotsky’s Zone of Proximal Development are essential for bringing students to higher level cognitive processingCritical thinking skills are obtained through multi-directional discourse and scaffolding